Analysing Teaching-Learning Interactions in Higher Education
Accounting for Structure and Agency

Description
Whilst current research into teaching and learning offers many insights into the experiences of academics and students in higher education, it has two significant shortcomings. It does not highlight the dynamic ways in which students and academics impact on each other in teaching-learning interactions or the ways in which these interactions are shaped by wider social processes.
This book offers critical insight into existing perspectives on researching teaching and learning in higher education and argues that alternative perspectives are required in order to account for structure and agency in teaching-learning interactions in higher education. In considering four alternative perspectives, it examines the ways in which teaching-learning interactions are shaped by teaching-learning environments, student and academic identities, disciplinary knowledge practices and institutional cultures. It concludes by examining the conceptual and methodological implications of these analyses of teaching-learning interactions and provides the reader with an invaluable guide to alternative ways of conceptualising and researching teaching and learning in higher education.
About this Author
Paul Ashwinis Professor of Higher Education at Lancaster University, UK.
Reviews
Analysing Teaching-Learning Interactions in Higher Education does a very good job of examining theoretical frameworks for teaching and learning in higher education contexts and select educational systems of European heritage. If you are fatigued with the same old binary debates in American mainstream publication -teaching versus learning, student-centered versus teaching-centered pedagogies, or disciplinary content versus critical thinking-this book might be right for you.
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